
Simultaneous Transit and Pyramid Alignments: Were the Egyptians’ Errors in Their Stars or in Themselves? By Glen Dash, Glen Dash Foundation for Archaeological Research [Revision of January 27, 2015] In a 2000 paper in the journal Nature, Kate Spence captured the imagination of the Egyptological world by using the circumpolar stars to calculate the date upon which the Great Pyramid was commenced and showing how the Egyptians might have used those stars to align the pyramids of the Old Kingdom with due north. [1] It has been nearly fifteen years since Spence published her theory. How well has it held up? The Egyptians, Spence theorized, had used a method known as “simultaneous transit” to align the pyramids with due north. Spence noted that two bright northern stars, Kochab in the asterism we call the Little Dipper and Mizar in the Big Dipper, straddled the celestial pole in the pyramid age. In fact, in 2467 BC a chord drawn through them would have passed directly through the pole (Figure 1). An observer in 2467 BC could have held up a plumb line and waited for the two stars to transit behind it. At that moment, the line between the observers’ pupil and the plumb line would have been due north. For any two stars, however, this technique works perfectly only in one particular year. Owing to precession, a wobble in the Earth’s orientation as it spins on its axis, the celestial pole moves relative to the stars. In the case of the simultaneous transit of Kochab and Mizar, this movement, projected onto the ground at Giza, amounts to 31 minutes of arc per century or about 3 minutes of arc per decade, about one twentieth of one degree. [2] (There are 60 arc minutes in one degree.) Therefore, if the Egyptians attempted to find due north using the technique ten years later in 2457 BC, their results would have been off by about 3 minutes of arc. To Spence, however, this was an advantage. The effect of precession on the movement of Kochab and Mizar relative to the celestial pole could be used to provide the very date the Great Pyramid was started. To calculate that date, Spence used Josef Dorner’s measurement of the casing on pyramid’s west side. Dorner measured its azimuth, or clockwise angle off of due north, as -2.8 minutes (2.8 minutes west of north). [3] The two stars were 2.8 minutes of arc west of 1 north in 2476 BC. According to Spence’s theory, that date, plus or minus five years or so, was the date the Great Pyramid was started. [4] In theory, Spence’s model can also be used to calculate the commencement date of the other Fourth Dynasty pyramids. Egypt’s Fourth Dynasty was the pinnacle of its pyramid building age and included the building of all three pyramids at Giza (Khufu, Khafre and Menkaure) and the three pyramids of Snefru, Khufu’s father, the first at Meidum, and the second and third, the “Bent” and the “Red,” at Dahshur. Table 1 compares calculated dates for the commencement of these six pyramids using Spence’s methodology with more traditional dates based on the work of von Beckerath and Stadelmann. Spence cites the von Beckerath and Stadelmann work in her paper as “currently accepted” chronologies. A plus sign in the table indicates that the pyramid is rotated clockwise from cardinal directions, a minus sign, counterclockwise. Table 1: Analysis of the Application of Spence's Theory to Fourth Dynasty Pyramids Date of Spence’s Commencement Date of Tabulated According to Commencement Azimuths Spence’s Difference Order of Pyramid According to of Casings “Currently in Years Commencement Spence’s Theory (Minutes Accepted” [5] of Arc) Chronologies [6] Snefru- -18.1 2525 BC 2598 BC 73 1 Meidum Snefru- -11.8 2505 BC 2583 BC 78 2 Bent Snefru- -8.7 2495 BC 2572 BC 77 3 Red Khufu -2.8 2476 BC 2552 BC 76 4 Khafre +6.0 2448 BC 2520 BC 72 5 Menkaure +14.1 2422 BC 2487 BC 65 6 2 Spence’s analysis does places the Fourth Dynasty pyramids in their correct order of commencement. However, on average, Spence’s dates are 74 years later than those in the currently accepted chronologies. [7] Spence defends the difference stating that, “[E]xisting Egyptian chronologies of this period [which are] based primarily on cumulative reign lengths can only be considered accurate to about +/- 100 years.” Now, let’s examine Spence’s hypothesis in more detail by taking a closer look at the available data for these six pyramids (see table below). For Meidum, Spence used the angle of the west side of the pyramid as recorded by Flinders Petrie, -18.1 minutes. [8] However, the base of the Meidum pyramid is not square. Petrie reported that north side is rotated -35.4 minutes with respect to cardinal points, the east side - 20.6 minutes and the south side -23.6 minutes. The average error is -24.4 minutes. If the base of the Meidum pyramid was square, all four sides would share the same deviation from cardinal directions. Spence used the data from Josef Dorner’s survey at Dahshur for the Bent Pyramid. [9] Dorner reported -11.8 minutes as the angle of the west side of the Bent Pyramid. As is the case at Meidum, the base is not particularly square. Dorner found that its eastern side skews further counterclockwise than the west, running at an angle of -17.3 minutes. The north and south sides run -7.5 and -4.2 minutes respectively off cardinal points. The average error is -10.2 minutes. Dorner also surveyed the Red Pyramid, but was only able to determine the azimuth of its eastern side, which he reported as -8.7 minutes. [10] Spence used Dorner’s survey at Giza for the angle of the Great Pyramid of Khufu, which was the best survey data available at that time. [11] Since then, however, we have new data derived from a survey by Lehner and Goodman. [12] The east side of the Great Pyramid runs at an angle of -3.4 minutes off due north, the west side -4.6 minutes, the north side -2.9 minutes and the south side -3.7 minutes for an average of -3.6 minutes. The base is nearly square. 3 For the Great Pyramid’s neighbor, Khafre, Dorner’s Giza survey data remains the best source. [13] The east and west sides of the Khafre pyramid are parallel and run at an angle of -6.0 minutes to due north. The north side runs at -5.2 minutes, and the south side -5.7 minutes. The average error of all four sides is -5.7 minutes. Like the Great Pyramid of Khufu, the base is nearly square. In her analysis, Spence used the west side of the Khafre pyramid as measured by Dorner. However, Dorner reported the angle of the west side of the Khafre pyramid as -6.0 minutes of arc which would have placed the Khafre pyramid ahead of the Khufu pyramid in the order of construction. In her paper, Spence reporting its angle as +6.0 minutes, arguing that the Egyptians could have performed the Khafre alignment ceremony in the fall rather than the spring which would have had the effect of reversing the sign. As shown in Figure 2, changing the season of measurement from the spring to the fall inverts the positions of the Kochab and Mizar and inverts the sign of any structure aligned with the simultaneous transit of the two stars. Had Khafre been aligned in the spring rather than the fall, Spence argued, it would have had a positive angle of rotation. For that reason, Spence used an angle of +6.0 minutes in her analysis. For Khafre’s neighbor, Menkaure, Spence used Petrie’s data. Petrie was not able to measure the angle of the pyramid’s west side. Petrie reported the east side as running at +12.4 minutes relative to due north, the north side as +16.8 minutes off cardinal points and the south side, +13.0 minutes. The average for the three sides was +14.1 minutes. Spence used the average value in her analysis. I have assembled the data for all six pyramids in Table 2. In order to evaluate Spence’s hypothesis, I have tentatively adopted her proposed 74 year shift of the von Beckerath and Stadelmann chronologies. For the time between the commencements of the kings’ reigns, I have used the von Beckerath and Stadelmann chronologies as well. In her paper, Spence did not do so, but adjusted the time between the commencements of kings’ reigns to match her theory, arguing that the length of the reigns were not well established. 4 Table 2: Summary of Survey Data: Angles of Fourth Dynasty Pyramids Date of Commencement According to “Currently N E S W Average Pyramid Accepted” (Minutes) (Minutes) (Minutes (Minutes) (Minutes) Chronologies Plus 74 Years [14] Meidum 2522 BC -35.4 -20.6 -23.6 -18.1 -24.4 Bent 2507 BC -7.5 -17.3 -4.2 -11.8 -10.2 Red 2496 BC -8.7 Khufu 2476 BC -2.9 -3.4 -3.7 -4.6 -3.6 Khafre 2444 BC -5.2 -6 -5.7 -6 -5.7 Menkaure 2411 BC 16.8 12.4 13.0 14.1 I have plotted the data from Table 2 in Figure 3. At the top of Figure 3 we see the angles of the pyramids’ sides as measured, and at the bottom, the angles with the orientation of the Khafre pyramid reversed as Spence has proposed.
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